10,574 research outputs found
Factorization of the Non-Stationary Schrodinger Operator
We consider a factorization of the non-stationary Schrodinger operator based
on the parabolic Dirac operator introduced by Cerejeiras/ Kahler/ Sommen. Based
on the fundamental solution for the parabolic Dirac operators, we shall
construct appropriated Teodorescu and Cauchy-Bitsadze operators. Afterwards we
will describe how to solve the nonlinear Schrodinger equation using Banach
fixed point theorem.Comment: Accepted for publication in Advances in Applied Clifford Algebra
Analytical and numerical studies of disordered spin-1 Heisenberg chains with aperiodic couplings
We investigate the low-temperature properties of the one-dimensional spin-1
Heisenberg model with geometric fluctuations induced by aperiodic but
deterministic coupling distributions, involving two parameters. We focus on two
aperiodic sequences, the Fibonacci sequence and the 6-3 sequence. Our goal is
to understand how these geometric fluctuations modify the physics of the
(gapped) Haldane phase, which corresponds to the ground state of the uniform
spin-1 chain. We make use of different adaptations of the strong-disorder
renormalization-group (SDRG) scheme of Ma, Dasgupta and Hu, widely employed in
the study of random spin chains, supplemented by quantum Monte Carlo and
density-matrix renormalization-group numerical calculations, to study the
nature of the ground state as the coupling modulation is increased. We find no
phase transition for the Fibonacci chain, while we show that the 6-3 chain
exhibits a phase transition to a gapless, aperiodicity-dominated phase similar
to the one found for the aperiodic spin-1/2 XXZ chain. Contrary to what is
verified for random spin-1 chains, we show that different adaptations of the
SDRG scheme may lead to different qualitative conclusions about the nature of
the ground state in the presence of aperiodic coupling modulations.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review
The Anomalous Hall effect in re-entrant AuFe alloys and the real space Berry phase
The Hall effect has been studied in a series of AuFe samples in the
re-entrant concentration range, as well as in the spin glass range. The data
demonstrate that the degree of canting of the local spins strongly modifies the
anomalous Hall effect, in agreement with theoretical predictions associating
canting, chirality and a real space Berry phase. The canonical parametrization
of the Hall signal for magnetic conductors becomes inappropriate when local
spins are canted.Comment: 4 pages, 1 eps figur
Conditions for the onset of the current filamentation instability in the laboratory
Current Filamentation Instability (CFI) is capable of generating strong
magnetic fields relevant to explain radiation processes in astrophysical
objects and lead to the onset of particle acceleration in collisionless shocks.
Probing such extreme scenarios in the laboratory is still an open challenge. In
this work, we investigate the possibility of using neutral
beams to explore the CFI with realistic parameters, by performing 2D
particle-in-cell simulations. We show that CFI can occur unless the rate at
which the beam expands due to finite beam emittance is larger than the CFI
growth rate and as long as the role of competing electrostatic two-stream
instability (TSI) is negligible. We also show that the longitudinal energy
spread, typical of plasma based accelerated electron-positron fireball beams,
plays a minor role in the growth of CFI in these scenarios
Correlation amplitude and entanglement entropy in random spin chains
Using strong-disorder renormalization group, numerical exact diagonalization,
and quantum Monte Carlo methods, we revisit the random antiferromagnetic XXZ
spin-1/2 chain focusing on the long-length and ground-state behavior of the
average time-independent spin-spin correlation function C(l)=\upsilon
l^{-\eta}. In addition to the well-known universal (disorder-independent)
power-law exponent \eta=2, we find interesting universal features displayed by
the prefactor \upsilon=\upsilon_o/3, if l is odd, and \upsilon=\upsilon_e/3,
otherwise. Although \upsilon_o and \upsilon_e are nonuniversal (disorder
dependent) and distinct in magnitude, the combination \upsilon_o + \upsilon_e =
-1/4 is universal if C is computed along the symmetric (longitudinal) axis. The
origin of the nonuniversalities of the prefactors is discussed in the
renormalization-group framework where a solvable toy model is considered.
Moreover, we relate the average correlation function with the average
entanglement entropy, whose amplitude has been recently shown to be universal.
The nonuniversalities of the prefactors are shown to contribute only to surface
terms of the entropy. Finally, we discuss the experimental relevance of our
results by computing the structure factor whose scaling properties,
interestingly, depend on the correlation prefactors.Comment: v1: 16 pages, 15 figures; v2: 17 pages, improved discussions and
statistics, references added, published versio
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Electronic state spectroscopy of C<sub>2</sub>Cl<sub>4</sub>
The VUV spectrum of C2Cl4 is reported in the energy range 3.8-10.8 eV (325-115 nm). Several photoabsorption features are observed for the first time, including a very weak low-lying band which is provisionally attributed to a π → π* triplet transition. Recent ab initio calculations of the molecule’s electronic transitions [Arulmozhiraja et al. J. Chem. Phys. 129 (2008) 174506] provide the basis for the present assignments below 8.5 eV. An extended ndπ series is proposed to account for several higher-energy Rydberg bands. The identification of vibrational structure, dominated by symmetric C=C and CCl2 stretching in excitations from the HOMO, largely agrees with previous spectroscopic studies. The present absolute photoabsorption cross sections cover a wider energy range than the previous measurements and are used to calculate UV photolysis lifetimes of this aeronomic molecule at altitudes between 20 and 50 km
Opening minds to Lean management in Nuclear Medicine
Nuclear Medicine (NM) is in constant technological evolution, challenging often professionals to be up to most recent standards and practices. In this sense, teaching NM should not be limited on the transmission of technical and scientific knowledge but also on opening minds to, for example, different management philosophies. Therefore, Nuclear Medicine students should be capable to change behaviours/practices and be concerned to search continuous improvement. To reach this standard, NM Department at our institution decided to implement the application of Lean Philosophy (management culture/philosophy focused on reducing various types of waste) in NM, in a process involving students, teachers and alumni.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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